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TEST BANK — Microbiology: An Evolving Science, 3rd Edition — John W. Foster & Joan L. Slonczewski — ISBN 9780393123678

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The Test Bank for Microbiology: An Evolving Science, 3rd Edition by John W. Foster and Joan L. Slonczewski (ISBN 9780393123678) offers a comprehensive set of instructor-ready assessment materials that align precisely with the textbook’s structure and content. This resource includes a range of question formats—multiple-choice, true/false, short answer, and applied scenarios—crafted to test both foundational knowledge and analytical reasoning in undergraduate microbiology courses. Organized across five parts, the test bank begins with Part I: The Microbial Cell, covering Chapter 1: Microbial Life: Origin and Discovery, Chapter 2: Observing the Microbial Cell, Chapter 3: Cell Structure and Function, Chapter 4: Bacterial Culture, Growth, and Development, Chapter 5: Environmental Influences and Control of Microbial Growth, and Chapter 6: Viruses. Part II: Genes and Genomes assesses core genetic concepts through Chapter 7: Genomes and Chromosomes, Chapter 8: Transcription, Translation, and Bioinformatics, Chapter 9: Gene Transfer, Mutations, and Genome Evolution, Chapter 10: Molecular Regulation, Chapter 11: Viral Molecular Biology, and Chapter 12: Biotechniques and Synthetic Biology. Part III: Metabolism and Biochemistry includes problem sets and concept checks aligned with Chapter 13: Energetics and Catabolism, Chapter 14: Electron Flow in Organotrophy, Lithotrophy, and Phototrophy, Chapter 15: Biosynthesis, and Chapter 16: Food and Industrial Microbiology. Part IV: Microbial Diversity and Ecology includes comprehensive questions from Chapter 17: Origins and Evolution, Chapter 18: Bacterial Diversity, Chapter 19: Archaeal Diversity, Chapter 20: Eukaryotic Diversity, Chapter 21: Microbial Ecology, and Chapter 22: Microbes in Global Elemental Cycles. Part V: Medicine and Immunology is designed to evaluate applied understanding of host-pathogen interaction, immunological defense, and disease. It features material from Chapter 23: Human Microbiota and Innate Immunity, Chapter 24: The Adaptive Immune Response, Chapter 25: Microbial Pathogenesis, Chapter 26: Microbial Diseases, Chapter 27: Antimicrobial Therapy, and Chapter 28: Clinical Microbiology and Epidemiology.

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Microbiology An Evolving Science, 3rd Edition
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April 12, 2024
Number of pages
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Written in
2025/2026
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CHAPTER 1: Microbial Life: Origin and Discovery
Test Bank: Microbiology An Evolving Science, 3rd Edition, John Foster & Joan
Slonczewski

MULTIPLE CHOICE

1. Viruses are:
M
a. infectious agents that infect multi-cellular organisms
b. noncellular particles that take over the metabolism of a cell to generate more virus
particles
c. pathogens that replicate in complex growth media
ED
d. cellular particles that belong to the archaea domain
e. microbes that consist of lipid membrane enclosed genomes
ANS: B DIF: Easy REF: 1.1 TOP: I.A | I.B
MSC: Remembering
C
2. Analysis of DNA sequences reveals:
a. the ancient convergence of two cell types, i.e., prokaryotes and eukaryotes
b. prokaryotes and eukaryotes evolved from a common ancestral cell
O
c. that bacteria share common ancestor with archaea, but not with eukarya
d. prokaryotes are cells with a nucleus
e. the genome of Haemophilus influenzae has about 2 billion base pairs
N
ANS: B DIF: Easy REF: 1.1 TOP: I.A | I.B
MSC: Remembering
N
3. Which of these groups are considered to be microbes but NOT considered to be cells?
a. viruses d. protists
b. bacteria e. filamentous fungi
c. archaea
O
ANS: A DIF: Easy REF: 1.1 TOP: I.A.i
MSC: Remembering
IS
4. A microbe is commonly defined as:
a. a virus that requires a microscope to be seen
b. a bacterium that requires a microscope to be seen
c. a single-cellular prokaryote that requires a microscope to be seen
SE
d. a multicellular eukaryote that requires a microscope to be seen
e. a living organism that requires a microscope to be seen
ANS: E DIF: Easy REF: 1.1 TOP: I.A.i | I.A.ii
MSC: Remembering
U
5. Which one of the following statements regarding microbial cells is NOT true?
a. Microbial cells acquire food, gain energy to build themselves, and respond to
environmental change.
R

, b. Most single-celled organisms require a microscope to render them visible, but some
bacterial cells are large enough to be seen with naked eyes.
c. Microbes function as individual entities.
d. Many microbes form complex multicellular assemblages.
e. Viruses are not considered as microbial cells.
ANS: C DIF: Easy REF: 1.1 TOP: I.A.i | I.A.ii
MSC: Remembering
M
6. Which of the following statements is FALSE?
a. A genome is the total genetic information contained in an organism’s chromosomal DNA.
b. If a microbe’s genome includes genes for nitrogenase, that microbe probably can fix
nitrogen.
ED
c. By comparing DNA sequences of different organisms, we can figure out how closely
related they are.
d. Fred Sanger developed the first applicable DNA sequencing method.
e. Fred Sanger completed the sequences of Haemophilus influenzae.
ANS: E DIF: Easy REF: 1.1 TOP: I.B
C
MSC: Remembering

7. The first cellular genomes to be sequenced were those of:
a. humans d. prions
O
b. bacteria e. fungi
c. viruses
ANS: B DIF: Easy REF: 1.1 TOP: I.B.i
N
MSC: Remembering

8. The environment of early Earth may have contained all of the following EXCEPT:
N
a. ferrous iron d. oxygen
b. methane e. hydrogen gas
c. ammonia
O
ANS: D DIF: Easy REF: Special Topic 1.1
TOP: II.D MSC: Remembering
IS
9. The development of the theory of the ―RNA world‖ resulted from the discovery of:
a. archaea d. ribozymes
b. prions e. endosymbionts
c. bacteria
SE
ANS: D DIF: Medium REF: Special Topic 1.1
TOP: II.D MSC: Remembering

10. Which microbes may resemble those of the earliest life forms?
a. archaea d. cyanobacteria
U
b. photosynthetic algae e. protists
c. viruses
ANS: A DIF: Medium REF: Special Topic 1.1
R
TOP: II.D MSC: Remembering

11. Early metabolism may have been catalyzed by:
a. DNA d. amino acids
b. RNA e. carbohydrates

, c. protein
ANS: B DIF: Medium REF: Special Topic 1.1
TOP: II.D MSC: Remembering

12. Which of the following diseases accounts for more than half of all human mortality?
a. cardiovascular disease d. microbial disease
b. cancer e. strokes
c. accidents
M
ANS: D DIF: Easy REF: 1.2 TOP: II.A
MSC: Remembering
ED
13. Which century is known as the golden age of microbiology?
a. the seventeenth d. the twentieth
b. the eighteenth e. the twenty-first
c. the nineteenth
ANS: C DIF: Easy REF: 1.2 TOP: II.A
MSC: Remembering
C

14. All of the following have been found in mummies and tomb art EXCEPT:
a. tuberculosis d. smallpox
O
b. polio e. AIDS
c. leprosy
ANS: E DIF: Medium REF: 1.2 TOP: II.A.i
N
MSC: Remembering

15. How did European invaders to North America kill much of the native population?
N
a. tuberculosis d. HIV
b. leprosy e. bubonic plague
c. smallpox
O
ANS: C DIF: Medium REF: 1.2 TOP: II.A.i
MSC: Remembering
IS
16. Nightingale:
a. is better known as the founder of professional nursing
b. was the first to use disinfectant to demonstrate the significance of aseptic technique
c. developed the pie chart of mortality data during the Crimean War
SE
d. performed the first controlled experiment on the chemical conversion of matter, known
today as chemotherapy
e. all of the above
ANS: A DIF: Easy REF: 1.2 TOP: II.A.ii
MSC: Remembering
U
17. Who developed the concept of medical statistics?
a. Francis Crick d. Louis Pasteur
b. Florence Nightingale e. Alexander Fleming
R
c. Edward Jenner
ANS: B DIF: Easy REF: 1.2 TOP: II.A.ii
MSC: Remembering

, 18. The first person to visualize individual microbes was:
a. Antonie van Leeuwenhoek d. Lady Montagu
b. Robert Hooke e. Edward Jenner
c. Louis Pasteur
ANS: A DIF: Easy REF: 1.2 TOP: II.B.ii
MSC: Remembering

19. Which technique was developed to distinguish bacteria from human cells?
M
a. Gram stain d. DNA sequencing
b. electron microscopy e. polymerase chain reaction (PCR)
c. X-ray diffraction
ED
ANS: A DIF: Medium REF: 1.2 TOP: II.B.ii
MSC: Remembering

20. How is most sterilization performed for the controlled study of microbes?
a. boiling d. autoclaving
b. pasteurization e. irradiation
C
c. filter sterilization
ANS: D DIF: Medium REF: 1.2 TOP: II.C.iii.a
MSC: Remembering
O
21. Microbes can shape human history via:
a. lithotrophic activities d. production of cheese
b. production of alcoholic beverages e. all of the above
N
c. diseases that they cause
ANS: E DIF: Medium REF: 1.2 TOP: II.A
N
MSC: Understanding

22. Suppose Pasteur’s swan-necked flasks containing boiled broth became cloudy 24 hours after boiling.
O
Which choice could best explain the turbidity or cloudiness in the broth without supporting
spontaneous generation?
a. Endospores in the broth survived boiling and grew after the broth cooled.
b. Contaminating organisms in the broth killed by boiling became alive again after the broth
IS
cooled.
c. Chemicals in the broth came together to form living organisms.
d. The broth allowed light to pass through it with less interference after boiling.
e. Solid material in the broth dissolved during boiling.
SE
ANS: A DIF: Difficult REF: 1.2 TOP: II.C.ii.b
MSC: Applying

23. Robert Koch’s greatest accomplishment in the field of medical bacteriology was with:
a. Escherichia coli d. rabies
U
b. Bacillus subtilis e. smallpox
c. Mycobacterium tuberculosis
ANS: C DIF: Medium REF: 1.3 TOP: III.B.i
R
MSC: Remembering

24. The use of agar as the gelling agent in solid media was suggested by:
a. Robert Koch d. Louis Pasteur
b. Ignaz Semmelweis e. Richard Petri
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